Attempts to declare Bulgaria's Slavic Muslims Arabs

Submitted by Anonim on Sat, 04/09/2011 - 08:21

On 2 January a small group of Bulgarians in the south-central city of Madan protested Israel’s escalating military operation in Gaza. Braving the cold, some 800 to 1,000 people held up signs written in Bulgarian, English, and Arabic. The demonstration was organized by the local mosque's board of governors and was covered widely in the Bulgarian press.

Bulgarian Muslims demand their names back at landmark rally

Submitted by Anonim on Tue, 12/01/2009 - 11:14

Bulgarian Muslims demand their names back at landmark rally. The easing of repressive rule by Bulgaria’s new leadership brought thousands of the country's minority Muslims on to the streets at the weekend to demand religious and cultural freedoms, and an investigation into alleged atrocities carried out under the recently deposed Zhivkov regime.

A case study of identity formation among pomaks in bulgaria, greece and turkey

Submitted by Anonim on Sat, 12/05/2009 - 14:49

“No Balkan Muslim identity is more contested, more wrapped in multiple intertwining twisted webs of myth and history than the Slavic-speaking Muslims or “Pomaks” of the Southern Balkan range” Mary Neuburger, 2000, p. 68.

UNHCR Bulgaria : Bulgarian-speaking Muslims (Pomaks)

Submitted by Anonim on Tue, 12/01/2009 - 14:35

Profile Bulgarian-speaking Muslims, commonly known as Pomaks, are most probably descendants of Bulgarian Christians who converted to Islam during the period of Ottoman rule, while retaining the Bulgarian language as well as certain Orthodox practices.

Bulgaria nationalists rally in support of Muslims' trial

Submitted by Anonim on Mon, 10/29/2012 - 18:41

Hundreds of nationalists rallied in a southern Bulgarian town on Monday in support of the prosecution of 13 religious leaders accused of spreading radical Islam in a case causing communal strains in the Balkan country.

Bulgarian MPs Officially Condemn 'Revival Process'

Submitted by Anonim on Wed, 01/11/2012 - 19:50

During its first workday after the winter holiday break, the Parliament condemned with an official declaration the Communist's regime attempt to forcefully assimilate Bulgarian Muslims, known and the "Revival Process."

Bulgarian Helsinki Committee Rises Against Xenophobic Party

Submitted by Anonim on Sat, 05/21/2011 - 14:26

The Bulgarian Helsinki Committee has sent a letter to the country's Chief Prosecutor demanding a thorough investigation of Friday's clashes in downtown Sofia, in which the nationalist Ataka (Attack) party was involved.

The Pomaks Caught in a Three-way Tug-of-War

Submitted by Anonim on Sat, 04/09/2011 - 07:34

The Pomaks, an ethnic group that resides in the mountains and valleys along the border between Bulgaria and Greece and has been almost forgotten by the rest of the world for decades, are striving to use the new era of democracy and open borders to bolster their religious and cultural identity.

Who is Bulgarian? The Changing Definitions of Nationhood

Submitted by Anonim on Wed, 02/02/2011 - 14:35

The changes in the definitions of the Bulgarian nation generally corresponded and justified the strategies adopted by the Bulgarian state to deal with its Turkish minority, although on a number of occasions they acquired a force of their own.

Pomaks. History of the Slavic people of the Muslim faith – History and modernity

Submitted by Anonim on Tue, 12/01/2009 - 15:37

Slavic Muslim representation in the Balkans is not confined to bosnians, so loudly had become in the early 90’s. last century. For several centuries the territory of Greece, Bulgaria and Turkey inhabits the other Slavic peoples of Muslim faith, calling themselves ahryane and outside the society known as Pomaks.